In 2018, we wrote for the first time about anOrdain, a Scottish company producing in-house enamel-dialed watches in Glasgow. At the time, the company was just six people strong and only capable of churning out 8 dials per week using the grand feu enameling technique, which involves covering a copper dial with ground enamel powder and then firing it in an oven.
Until anOrdain was established, there were very few companies one could look to for an affordable enamel-dial watch — because of the time and costs involved with firing enamel dials (and the steep learning curve), these timepieces can often cost tens of thousands of dollars. Sure, an enormous watchmaker like Seiko can produce something like the Presage with an enamel dial (which we loved, by the way), but if you wanted something slightly more out of the ordinary, you’d have been hard-pressed to find it.
“We tried making enamel dials elsewhere in the UK and people just couldn’t manage the tolerances, and didn’t have the passion to do it, so we started doing it ourselves,” explains company founder Lewis Heath. “A consequence of that is the price; the raw materials aren’t too expensive, once you’ve mastered the techniques then the cost is in labour — we’re now getting to the stage where we can make 14 or 15 per week with a team of three enamellers, so it’s starting to become a viable business, but it’s been a long way from that for the past four years. If we didn’t make them in-house then we’d be paying mark-ups for a third party and that takes you out of ‘affordable’ territory very quickly.”
anOrdain’s watches, as a consequence, run around 1,000 GBP (~$1,200-$1,300), which is very little money when you consider the size of their operation and the beautiful products they’ve been producing in just a few short years. anOrdain has won fans all over the world through their classically-inspired designs, beautiful dial colors and friendly attitude toward their clients, though Heath doesn’t draw the line at making exclusively enamel-dial watches, and there’s clearly plenty of exciting work to come down the pipeline.
“The crux of anOrdain has always been around fusing design with craft and experimenting, so we aren’t sticking to enamel religiously — there’ll be some work coming out which isn’t enamel soon, but there’s certainly a lot more to explore here!”
We recently visited anOrdain in Glasgow to get a better idea of how the company works its magic and makes these affordable beauties.